Casefile True Crime - Case 278: Alma Tirtschke (Part 2)
Episode Date: April 6, 2024*** Content warnings: Child victim, sexual assault *** [Part 2 of 2] Colin Ross maintained his innocence for the murder of Alma Tirtschke right up until his execution. Could he have been telling the... truth? --- Narration – Anonymous Host Research & writing – Milly Raso Creative direction – Milly Raso Production and music – Mike Migas Music – Andrew D.B. Joslyn Sign up for Casefile Premium: Apple Premium Spotify Premium Patreon For all credits and sources, please visit casefilepodcast.com/case-278-alma-tirtschke-part-2
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Shortly after 3 on the afternoon of Friday December 30 1921, Melbourne cab driver Joseph Graham was strolling up Little Collins Street on his way to the grocery
store. All of a sudden, a piercing high-pitched scream rang out. The area was notoriously rowdy,
but in the hundreds of times that Joseph had been there,
he'd never heard such a heart-rending scream. He described it as sounding like,
a little girl terrified at what was occurring or what was about to occur.
Joseph estimated that the girl was between the ages of 10 and 15.
It sounded as if she was being dragged somewhere close by.
Five or six more screams followed, each more terrifying than the last, as the girl was
slowly drained of energy.
Further down the street, another man also heard the screams.
He and Joseph glanced around trying to identify where exactly
the noise was coming from. While they couldn't narrow down an exact spot,
they seemed to be coming from the direction of Gun Alley. When Joseph Graham heard about Alma Tursky's murder a little over a week later, he went
straight to the police to report the screams he'd heard on Little Collins Street on the
afternoon of December 30.
The officers didn't seem interested.
Plenty of people brought their children into the city and it wasn't unusual to hear them
screeching for a litany of innocent reasons.
Some local business owners brought their
children to work with them, including a nearby barber, whose young daughter was known for her
screeching. Despite these explanations, Joseph remained certain that what he'd heard wasn't just
a child playfully acting up. Meanwhile, at a police station in the regional town of Ballarat, the other man who heard the screams also came forward. Like Joseph, he reported that the
screaming occurred sometime between around 3.05 and 3.25pm. But unlike Joseph, he didn't think
there were multiple screams, just a single scream that echoed down the street. He thought it was emanating from
a derelict lodging house next to Gunn Alley, but as he walked towards the distressing sound,
it suddenly stopped. The man convinced himself it was just an unruly child being disciplined
by an exasperated parent and carried on with his day. When he heard about Alma Tursky's
murder, he thought about contacting the police, but he was unwell at the time and didn't want
the publicity. He also assumed the other witness, Joseph Graham, would report it, thus negating his
need to do so. When the days passed with no reports about the screams in the papers, he finally decided
to come forward, saying there was a stallholder in the Eastern market who could corroborate his
version of events. Ballarat police forwarded this information to the detectives fronting the Tershki
case. They now had two independent accounts of a girl screaming in fright around Little
Collins Street between 3 and 3.30pm on Friday December 30. These reports aligned with the
last confirmed sighting of Alma Tursky after she left the Eastern Arcade on the very corner
where the lodging house was located. This posed a major problem for investigators. They'd been working on the
theory that Alma had been lured somewhere private to be assaulted before her body was dumped in
Gun Alley later that night. What's more, if the screams heard had indeed come from Alma,
it vindicated their prime suspect, Colin Ross.
vindicated their prime suspect, Colin Ross. When Colin Ross was found guilty of the 12-year-old's murder, his family were left stunned. From the outset of the investigation, they knew there was
no way he could have done it. For starters, Colin's brother Stanley Ross worked alongside Collin at the Australian wine saloon. At around
2pm on Friday December 30 1921, Stanley was in his usual spot behind the bar when Collin arrived
for work. It was a relatively quiet afternoon. The brothers spent the entire afternoon serving
and interacting with the few clientele. At no point did Stanley
see a young girl matching Alma Turski's description in the saloon. Collins sometimes brought women into
the private room behind the bar, but they were never as young as Alma. Former bartender Ivy
Matthews and saloon customer Frances Upton had both served as star witnesses
for the prosecution, implicating Colin in the young girl's murder.
Both claimed they had been drinking at the Australian Wine Saloon Friday December 30,
1921, where they ordered drinks at the bar.
But Stanley had been behind the bar all afternoon, and at no point did he see either one of them.
The only witness he did see was Olive Maddix.
Olive had testified to seeing an underage girl matching Alma's description drinking
in the parlour and had confronted Colin about it.
Yet, according to Stanley, this never happened. Olive did briefly greet
Colin at the bar, but the pair didn't engage in any meaningful conversation, and she never
mentioned the presence of a young girl. Stanley and Colin remained at the saloon together until
closing time, at which point Colin went home for dinner while Stanley
ate at a nearby restaurant. At 7.30pm Stanley returned to the saloon to use the bathroom.
No one else was in there. Colin had always maintained that he'd met his friend Gladys
in the city before returning home at around midnight and going straight to bed. His mother, Edie Ross,
vouched for this. She recalled that Colin had arrived home at around 7pm, ate dinner,
and then went out again. Edie was still up when Colin returned around midnight. He went straight
to the bedroom he shared with another of his brothers, Ronald.
A military man who'd served overseas, Ronald was a light sleeper who woke at the slightest of noises. He stirred when Colin entered the room and was certain he couldn't have left during the night
without waking him. According to prosecution witness Sydney Harding, Colin had confessed to killing Alma in the back
room behind the bar before cleaning the scene. Stanley Ross had returned to the Australian wine
saloon on Saturday morning to prepare for the day's trade. He swept the floor and scrubbed
surfaces. There was no indication that the saloon or its back room had been cleaned the previous
night. The Ross family testified at trial in support of Colin and corroborated his version of
events. Edie described Colin as a good son who was a bit rough around the edges, but certainly not
a child killer. Another one of Colin's brothers named Thomas told the court that when the family heard
news of Colin's arrest, they found it comical in its absurdity.
Thomas explained,
I thought that my brother would have been the last man in the world to be detained.
To outsiders, the Ross family were just protecting one of their own.
No one seemed to consider the possibility that they were telling the truth.
After Colin's conviction, his family gathered at their home to plot their next move.
They agreed without hesitation to mortgage their house to fund an appeal. All of a sudden,
there was a knock at the front door. Standing outside was a young woman who introduced herself
as Florence Rudkin. She was well aware of the infamous Tershki case. The vicious frenzy it
had stirred up in Melbourne had prevented Florence from coming forward sooner,
as she wanted no association with it. But with Colin being found guilty, Florence put her personal
feelings aside to reveal what she knew. At around five on the afternoon of Friday December 30,
1921, Florence had stopped in at the Australian wine saloon. She visited
occasionally as it was a quiet establishment where she could be left alone. Florence settled
into a dark corner in the parlour. It was an uneventful visit until Olive Maddox dropped in.
Boisterous and unsteady, Olive was clearly intoxicated. She stood at the parlor's entrance
and examined the room before moving off. Florence was still in the parlor when Olive reappeared
an hour later right before closing time. When Florence went to leave, Colin Ross was still
there. She caught a glimpse of the private room behind the bar.
There was no one there.
The reason Florence felt it was so important to come forward with this information was
that she had flowing red hair.
At the time of her visit to the saloon she'd been wearing a hat, just like Alma Tursky. Given that the parlour was dimly lit and
Olivmatix had been intoxicated, Florence feared that Oliv had mistaken her for Alma.
Stanley Ross had remembered Florence Rudkin as one of their few customers that day. He'd
sought her out when his brother was initially detained, but he only knew her as Flori and was unable to track her down.
Florence Rudkin was told to take her story to a man named Thomas Brennan. An experienced and
formidable criminal attorney, Brennan was one part of Colin's two-man legal team.
Brennan was one part of Colin's two-man legal team. Like the Rosses, Brennan was left speechless by Colin's conviction. He'd never doubted the man was innocent, and after hearing the entirety of the
prosecution's evidence in person, he couldn't believe the jury had found him guilty beyond
reasonable doubt. In the defence's opinion, the prosecution's case was not only absolutely incoherent, but
absolutely inconsistent. After detailing all of its flaws and inconsistencies, they were certain
Column was going to walk from court a free man. As far as the defence were concerned, the prosecution's star witnesses were a
quintent of disreputables. For starters, there was Francis Upton, the man who claimed to have
visited the Australian wine saloon after midnight on December 30 to encounter Colin Ross with
blood-stained hands. Francis had also implicated an unidentified woman who he claimed to have heard in the
saloon with Colin. Thomas Brennan was incredulous of Francis' testimony from the outset.
In Brennan's words, Francis was...
A derelict, a drunkard, a wife deserter, a notorious romancer, and convicted criminal.
a notorious romancer, and convicted criminal. His rap sheet included charges for larceny, drunkenness, and embezzlement. In court, Francis described himself as a bad character who'd skipped
out on his wife and kids and spent all his earnings on alcohol. Brennan hoped the jury would
realise that testimony beginning with the witness regaining
consciousness in a park after a bender necessitated a considerable degree of scepticism.
Francis even admitted during cross-examination that he usually got so drunk he didn't remember
anything. In fact, he was such a prolific alcoholic that he had no memories of ever visiting the Australian
wine saloon except for on December 30.
Francis said he'd learnt of Alma Tursky's murder on January 2, yet he only approached
police to implicate Colin Ross after the £1000 reward was offered. Then there were the two jailbirds, Sydney Harding and Joseph Dunstan.
Sydney testified that Colin had confessed to killing Elmer while they were in the prison yard.
Joseph corroborated this, saying he overheard parts of the confession. Thomas Brennan had explained to the jury why they should be wary of these claims.
Sydney and Joseph were convicted criminals with a history including assault, larceny,
receiving stolen goods and even perjury.
Not only were they known to one another, they were on remand for a housebreaking they committed
together.
Sydney Harding had come forward to the police before the Coronial Inquest, but after the big reward was announced. After establishing himself as a star prosecution witness, Sydney was permitted
to leave the confines of jail and to live in far cozier lodgings near the city. It was a fitting prize for a man
other prisoners referred to as a dog due to his reputation as a snitch.
Colin Ross knew of Sydney's dishonourable notoriety and in no way considered him a friend.
Thomas Brennan assumed the jury would realise how comical the whole setup was. Why would his
client trust a criminal he barely knew who had a reputation for leaking information to police?
During one prison visit, Colin's legal team had warned him,
say nothing, they'll plant people in here to testify against you.
It made no sense for him to then go and divulge everything about
the murder to a random inmate. Joseph Dunstan came forward to police after the coronial inquest,
but before the trial. He admitted that he'd spoken to Sydney before making his statement.
Both men also revealed that they'd read the Daily Paper together, which featured
detailed updates on the Tershki case. These stories included all the evidence, Colin's version of
events, and the allegations other witnesses had made against him. Another prisoner on remand with
the two witnesses claimed that he'd overheard Sydney tell Joseph,
I have told you about Ross and I will fix you up after the trial.
Thomas Brennan knew better than most that assertions made by prison snitches should be considered with extreme caution. Sydney and Joseph had proven themselves liars in the past, pleading innocent for crimes they
were ultimately found guilty of. Criminals usually didn't help the police unless there
was something in it for them. The jury were told to consider the likelihood the pair were offered
a deal to testify against Colin. As for Ivy Matthews, the former bartender who claimed to have seen Alma Tursky drinking in
the private room behind the bar of the Australian wine saloon, the defence had some serious doubts
about her story. Ivy was first interviewed by detectives almost a week after Alma's body was
discovered. At that time, Ivy said she hadn't seen Alma
and knew nothing about what had happened to her. It was only weeks later that she came
forward to police with her story implicating Colin Ross in the crime. When asked why she
hadn't revealed this pertinent information during her first interview, Ivy said as a former employee of Colin's she
felt a degree of loyalty to him. Both Ivy Matthews and Olive Maddux claimed to have
seen a girl matching Alma Tursky's description drinking at the saloon on the afternoon of
December 30. Colin had allegedly confessed to giving Alma upwards of three glasses of wine prior to the
attack. However, Alma's stomach had been examined post-mortem for traces of alcohol, and none were
found. During Colin's trial, the defence pointed out that both Ivy and Doleve had added more
damning claims against Colin every time they were interviewed. Not only
did they come forward after the £1000 reward was on offer, they also revealed key information
only when the same information had just been reported by the press. Ivy and Olive were
long-time friends who admitted to having discussed the case on multiple occasions before
and after Colin's arrest. As far as the defence were concerned, the two women had colluded to
falsely accuse Colin in a bid to claim the reward money. While the women claimed that they were
amicable with Colin, he said otherwise. Olive and Colin had a temperamental history with one another
and hadn't spoken for months. Meanwhile, Ivy had been aggressively demanding money from him that
she felt was owed to her. She was also bitter about having lost her job at the saloon, with Colin asserting that Ivy would, quote, do anything for spite to this episode's sponsors.
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As The Defence pointed out, the only moments where the five key witnesses' stories aligned was when they were presenting information that had been published in the papers.
The other mysteries of the case, such as how exactly Alma came to be in the saloon and
how her body was disposed of, conflicted between accounts.
Colin had allegedly told Ivy that Alma approached him and asked for a drink. In Sydney's version of
events, it was Colin who coaxed the girl into his saloon. Ivy said she'd seen Alma in the room behind
the bar at 3pm, while Olive said she saw Alma at 5pm in the parlour. In Ivy's version, Alma was awake and alert when the attack
commenced. In Sydney's account, Alma was unconscious. Ivy said Colin had driven
back to the city in the early hours, while Sydney claimed he rode a bicycle.
Depending on the witness, Alma's body was either driven or carried to Gunn Alley.
The timings of all these happenings conflicted, and when taken as a whole, were completely
incoherent.
Collins alleged descriptions of Alma also didn't add up.
Those who knew Alma best said she was a shy and naive girl with a quiet temperament. Accounts from the so-called
quintet of disreputals had Colin saying Alma was a cheeky little devil who demanded alcohol,
was forthright with men and sexually active. The defence felt there was no way Colin could
have interacted with Alma and come away with such an inaccurate character assessment.
None of this even took into account the assertions of other witnesses.
Sixty other customers visited the Australian Wine Saloon on December 30.
Based on the statements provided by Olive Maddix and Divy Matthews, Alma was in the saloon for upwards of three hours that afternoon. Yet, aside from those two women, no one else saw her. Two patrons said they'd shared a drink with
Colin Ross and his brother Stanley in the room behind the bar and remained there until closing
time. They could say with utmost confidence that Alma Tursky was not with them. These men along with
the other saloon patrons went to the police and vouched for Colin, unanimously stating that he
was at the saloon between 2pm and closing time on December 30. They remembered him helping his
brother behind the bar and chatting to customers. Ivy Matthews claimed it was the following day of December 31 that Colin led her out
of the saloon and onto Little Collins Street where he confessed to Elmer's murder.
But other patrons, including Florence Rugkin, had been in the saloon at the time.
At no point did they see Ivy Matthews there, nor did Colin leave the building at any time. At no point did they see Ivy Matthews there, nor did Colin leave the building at any time.
If he disappeared from view, it was for barely minutes at a time.
According to Olive Maddix, Colin had made suspicious comments to her about the Tershki case
on January 5. But multiple witnesses asserted that Colin was socialising at a home in West Melbourne
that day, and Doleve wasn't there. In the lead up to and during the trial, each of the prosecution's
witnesses were paid sustenance payments which rewarded witness cooperation. Post-conviction,
they were each eligible to receive a share of the £1,000 reward.
Thomas Brennan hoped the jury would realise the danger of hinging a man's life or death on
conflicting circumstantial evidence. Yet, even if the jury had dismissed the witnesses' claims, there was still the matter of the
prosecution's smoking gun, Alma's hairs found on the blankets from Colin's saloon.
This was concrete evidence that she'd been there, the kind of evidence that was impervious to
deceit, pressure or influence. Or was it? When the saloon closed down after failing to secure a new liquor license,
most of its contents were taken to the Ross family home in Footscray, including the two blankets from
the back room, one brown, one blue. The blankets were often laid out on the veranda for guests to sit on. At no point did Colin's
mother Edie see any long red hairs on them. If there were any, she believed they'd likely
come from a redheaded female relative who had been staying over. When the blankets were taken
into police custody, they weren't secured in any way to avoid contamination. After being freely
transported in a police car, they were left on a detective's desk for an extended period of time
until the analyst was ready to examine them. The Ross trial marked the first conviction in
Australasia using a scientific comparison of hairs, and it was not as reliable as it seemed. The analysis was done on
appearance alone. The analyst who performed the comparison was a chemist by trade. He had no expert
knowledge in hair analysis and had never previously analysed any hair samples. While the hairs were
all red in colour, they varied in tone, length and texture. Colin admitted
to bringing women into the saloon's back room. Two red-haired women even testified to having
combed their hair while in there, using a mirror which hung above the couch where the blankets were
laid. Gladys, the friend Colin brought to his saloon on the night of December 30, also had red hair.
Had the hairs been forcefully pulled from someone's scalp, one would expect they would
still contain their roots. However, only one of the hairs still had its root attached.
In the state they were found in, the hairs aligned more with having fallen out naturally, not forcefully. The one root the
analyst did have was essentially useless. He couldn't compare it to the sample of Alma's
hair as it had been cut six inches from her scalp and therefore didn't have any roots attached either.
The analyst concluded that all the hairs had come from Alma. But without a form of testing that could prove it, his findings were nothing more than personal
opinion.
Colin had initially identified the brown blanket where 22 of the red hairs were found as having
been inside his saloon, but he later realised that he'd confused it with another blanket. He now claimed that the one
taken in as evidence had never been in his saloon. When shown the exhibit, even former bartender
Ivy Matthews said she'd never seen that blanket before. Seamen stains found on the blue blanket
were deemed evidence that Colin had raped Daumer. However, when the blanket was kept at the Ross
House, several of Colin's brothers had sprawled on it with their girlfriends.
There was no way to test who the seaman originated from.
The torn up blue fabric allegedly found on Footscray Road before Colin's trial wasn't a
reliable piece of evidence either. It had been given weight because it
supported Sydney Harding's statement that Collins shredded Elmer's clothing and scattered the pieces
at that location after her murder. The piece of fabric was never proven to have originated from
Elmer's clothing. It was also surprisingly clean considering it had allegedly been on the side of a busy road for
months. Furthermore, the police had never even bothered to search the area where it was recovered.
Given the hoaxes that had arisen around Gunn Alley, it wasn't outrageous to consider that
the fabric could have been planted there. In any case, if Sydney's statement was a lie, as the defence argued, the fabric held no
relevance at all.
Even if Colin Ross had killed Alma Tershky, in each alleged version of the crime, the
manner in which the death occurred was described as accidental, not deliberate. Ivy Matthews' original statement
even contained the line, Colin did not intend to kill her, a crucial point she failed to repeat a
trial. The defence felt that even if the confessions were true, Colin should have been charged with the
lesser crime of manslaughter. With all this in mind, Thomas
Brennan couldn't believe Colin Ross was handed a guilty verdict for murder. Expressing an opinion
that was ahead of its time, Brennan believed the jury were unconsciously swayed by the sensational
and salacious press. Their articles inflamed public perception of Colin the moment he entered the
investigation. In Brennan's opinion, his client came into the dock convicted. He said,
Never in the history of serious crimes in Victoria, or indeed in the British Empire,
has a man been convicted on such a jumbled mass of contradictions.
The only explanation is that the jury quite unconsciously formed opinions before they went
into the box and, with their judgements clouded by their natural indignation,
they were unable to view the matter dispassionately.
In the months following Collins' trial, several jurors spoke anonymously with the Herald newspaper.
One said that during proceedings he'd locked eyes with Colin who quickly averted his gaze.
This one fleeting action led the juror to conclude that Colin was a guilty man.
Another said there was a fear among the jury of speaking critically about the evidence
presented against Colin in case, quote, the hand of public scorn might point them out forever.
He admitted that the jury had disregarded the claims by prosecution witness Francis Upton,
and there was scattered support for the others. The majority believed
Ivy Matthews, but only half believed Sydney Harding. The guilty verdict would have been
reached in minutes had it not been for two jurors expressing doubts that dragged the process out.
One of the dissenting jurors was an elderly man who broke down in tears when the verdict was
read out in court. Another became emotional once he got home, saying,
I never want to serve on another jury charged with having to decide on a man's fate again.
The defence had presented all the points justifying Colin's innocence during the trial and still
lost.
They couldn't pursue an appeal with the same information.
With Florence Rudkin coming forward post-conviction, Thomas Brennan had something new to work with.
And Florence wasn't the only one.
Prompted by the conviction, taxi driver Joseph Graham came forward to
Colin Ross' legal team to detail his story about hearing a young girl screaming on Little
Collins Street on the afternoon of Friday December 30 1921. Although the police had
been aware of this information and a second witness from Ballarat had corroborated it, this was the first time the defence had ever
heard of it. While detectives had taken notes, they never followed up with either of the men,
nor were further investigations made into the claims. The information was never given to the
press to see if anyone else could elaborate on it. Neither Joseph Graham nor the man from Ballarat were contacted
to participate in the coronial inquest or murder trial relating to Alma Turski's death.
To critics of the investigation, the men's exclusion highlighted the detective's attitude
towards evidence that vindicated Colin. The level of disinterest from authorities about these witness accounts resulted
in the name and contact details of the Ballarat man getting misplaced. Thomas Brennan took chief
responsibility for appealing Colin's verdict. When he made the application, he asked the Court of
Criminal Appeal for time. After all, two new and extraordinary witnesses had come forward
and he needed to investigate their claims thoroughly. The judges weren't willing to hold
up proceedings to allow such investigations to take place. Brennan told them,
surely in a case of life and death time should be given to prepare the appeal.
in a case of life and death, time should be given to prepare the appeal.
His request was denied and the appeal was scheduled to take place one week later.
Colin Ross appeared for the four day hearing. He was worn as he hadn't been sleeping and was in a constant state of anxiety. As a man on death row, he was isolated from other prisoners and was only let out into the yard when
it was empty. From there, he had a full view of the gallows. Due to the lack of preparation time,
Thomas Brennan wasn't able to schedule all the witnesses he'd intended to present at
Collins' appeal. He had to work with what he had, hoping it would be enough.
During the appeal process, a third new witness approached the Ross family. His name was George
Crilley and he'd been motivated to come forward after reading about Collins' ordeal and the
implication of police suppression and manipulation of evidence. George claimed that on the afternoon of Friday December
30 1921, he was walking up Little Collins Street between 1.30 and 1.45 pm when he noticed a girl
matching Alma Tursky's description. A man was following uncomfortably close behind her,
so much so that George felt an urge to confront him.
A short time later, George's attention was drawn to the facade of the Eastern Arcade.
The man and girl were standing there together, talking.
George didn't know who the man was, but it wasn't Colin Ross.
George had given this information to police during their investigations
and was questioned several times over the matter, but nothing further was done. When Thomas Brennan
informed the Court of Criminal Appeal of George Crilley's story, the Chief Justice replied,
There is nothing remarkable in somebody seen talking to a little girl.'"
Brennan argued otherwise, and while the judges agreed to consider George's statement,
they decided that they'd hear no further evidence and immediately retired to consider their verdict.
When it was time to make their announcement, the Chief Justice stated that it was not part of the court's function to put aside the verdict of a jury unless a miscarriage of justice could
be proven. With that, he announced that Colin Ross' appeal was denied. Colin sat quietly while
his mother and Florence Rugkin sobbed behind him. Colin was taken back to prison to await his death sentence.
Thomas Brennan filed a new appeal, this time with the High Court.
The proceedings commenced just weeks before Colin was due to be executed.
The High Court judges respected the jury's decision and rejected most of the grounds
brought forth by the defence. One judge acknowledged that while Collins' two alleged
confessions varied in facts, both ultimately had him admit to raping and killing Alma Tursky.
Quote, "...if there is any inconsistency, it is an inconsistency in the prisoner's statement,
not any inconsistency in the evidence of the witnesses to the alleged confessions.
The High Court, by a majority of four to one, rejected the motion for a retrial.
Colin cried out,
cried out, I am innocent and if they hang me they will hang an innocent man.
Edie Ross sold the family home to fund her son's appeals. She fought desperately for his life, taking her campaign all the way to high-ranking religious leaders, politicians and even the
Attorney General. She brought along a bundle of letters from sympathetic members of the public and a petition
against Colin's conviction with 2000 signatures of support.
The public perception of Colin was shifting.
As a result of their actions post trial, the integrity of the prosecution's star witnesses
were being questioned.
Having essentially been identified as a grifter, Frank Upton adopted an alias and fled the
state fearing retribution from Collins supporters.
Sydney Harding and Joseph Dunston were convicted of their joint housebreaking charge, though
Sydney was granted early release and Joseph was pardoned. This added credence to
the theory the men were offered deals to testify against Colin Ross. Olive Maddox wound up imprisoned
for sex work and drunkenness. Ivy Matthews gave an interview to the Midnight Sun newspaper about
the Tersky case that was full of inaccuracies, with the publication concluding,
The question of to what extent Matthews can be relied on, either in speaking of herself or others,
is a very open one indeed. While most Australians still believed in Collins' guilt,
some felt capital punishment should be reserved for the most
cold-blooded and calculated offenders. Letters were sent to the governor seeking mercy for Colin,
while others asked that he at least be given a proper opportunity to prove his innocence.
Edie Ross was nevertheless fighting an uphill battle. When she told one politician,
less fighting an uphill battle. When she told one politician,
my boy is as innocent as me, the politician responded, I am perfectly satisfied that you are wasting your time and money. She managed to get the Attorney General to acknowledge there
were weaknesses in the prosecution's case, but he refused to halt the execution.
On the morning of, Colin's family went to see him one last time. They struggled to find any words,
but Colin was talkative and appeared accepting of his fate. He expressed his gratitude for
their belief in him and encouraged them to live on without him.
His mother reassured him that she'd continue to fight for him until her last breath.
She wasn't permitted to hug Colin, so the brief meeting ended with an unceremonious,
verbal farewell. More than 1,000 people encircled Melbourne jail on the morning of Colin's execution.
In his final moments, Colin sat quietly with a reverend and wrote a letter to his family.
It read in part, Goodbye my darling mother and brothers. On this, the last day of my life,
I want to tell you that I love you more than ever.
Do not fear, for I know God will be with me. Try to forgive my enemies, let God deal with them.
Do not fret too much for me. The day is coming when my innocence will be proved."
When the cell door opened, Colin remained silent. He handed the reverend the Bible he'd
possessed during his incarceration, then placed his hand on the reverend's shoulders in a way
described as more eloquent than words. Colin was then led to the gallows. An experimental four strand rope was used for the occasion, though never again, as it
ended up taking upwards of 20 minutes for Colin Ross to die.
Colin's prison bible was passed on to his mother.
The inside was full of annotations and alterations he'd made to the text to make it relevant
to his current circumstances.
They depicted a man fighting desperately against a world determined to condemn him, with lines
like,
"...false witnesses rose up against me.
They laid to my charge things that I knew not.
Time will tell."
And, Charge things that I knew not. Time will tell.
And The police.
Wickedness is in the midst thereof.
Deceit and guile depart not from her streets.
Melbourne."
On one page Colin underlined the words, full of bribes, and wrote next to it. This is our police force which our people think so much of.
With the execution of Colin Ross, the Gun Alley murder as it came to be known faded from headlines
until eventually people stopped talking about it altogether.
Edie Ross maintained her promise to fight for her son's name. She wrote a letter to
the people of Australia that urged, "...I view with horror the awful crime for which my son was
wrongly executed. I quite understand the indignation and wrath that must sway the judgment of the
public at the committal of the shocking deed. But as his mother,
I protest with all my soul that my boy should be made the innocent victim of that indignation and
wrath. I have gone from place to place, from one to another, pleading for my boy's life, pleading
for justice and mercy, only to be turned away without hope. As my dear son Colin has
suffered all that the law can do to him, I now make a mother's appeal to the public of Australia
to help me clear my son's name from the terrible stigma that has been placed upon it.
Melbourne, however, was prepared to move on. And it did.
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Seventy-one years later, in 1993, a retrospective exhibition on Australian artist Charles Blackman
was held at the National Gallery of Victoria.
Titled Schoolgirls and Angels, it featured a series of paintings and drawings Blackman
produced in the 1950s depicting
bleak deserted cityscapes reminiscent of Melbourne in the 1920s.
A girl wearing a school uniform and a straw hat wandered among the streets as if lost,
her eyes wired in fear.
37-year-old Kevin Morgan was a trainee librarian at the National Gallery.
Every time he walked to his workspace, he passed black men's art.
Kevin didn't know what inspired the menacing images, but they intrigued him.
He found himself asking, who was this mysterious child?
He later explained, quote,
There was something about her, haunting and haunted,
that seemed to beg the heart. This child had a sense of death around her."
Seeking an explanation, Kevin read a catalogue about Charles Blackman that contained quotes from
an interview he'd given many years earlier. Blackman discussed his inspiration for the artwork, saying,
"...a schoolgirl was once murdered in a lane near the old Eastern Market,
and it left a direct and languished effect on me."
Kevin Morgan had never heard of Alma Tursky, but Blackman's confronting art had drove him to
learn more about her case. By that point, the families of the victim
and the convicted and all the witnesses and investigators involved in the original case
had passed away. Key locations like Gun Alley and the Eastern Arcade no longer existed.
Still, Kevin dug up as much information as he could, examining newspaper archives and the writings of defense attorney Thomas Brennan.
The more Kevin studied the case, the more he came to realize it featured two innocent victims.
The obvious one was Amitarsky. The other was Colin Ross.
Although Colin had died 34 years before Kevin was born, Kevin could feel Colin's presence in
everything he read. It felt as though he was crying out for his name to be cleared.
Kevin left his job to devote the next seven years of his life to conducting a deep dive into the
Tershki case. He reached out to the living relatives of those involved and obtained Colin's old
prison Bible which had been stored in a shed. Upon taking in all the messages Colin had
scrawled in it, Kevin was deeply affected. He accessed the original court documents absorbing
the mess of contradictions and anomalies in the prosecution witness testimony. He read about the witnesses
who had gone ignored but whose recollections might have rescued Colin from the gallows.
But the biggest revelation was yet to come.
As Kevin examined the archives of the Office of Public Prosecution's library,
he made a discovery. Upon looking inside an old, forgotten box,
he came across an envelope marked with the words, On His Majesty's Service. Inside were
several white cards with a small amount of hair stuck to them. One card was labelled
as Alma Turski's hair. The other held the hairs lifted from Colin Ross' brown blanket.
In 1922, these hairs played a major role in securing Colin's conviction. Even after so many years, they were as vibrant a red hue as ever. Kevin had been told that all the physical evidence
pertaining to the case had been destroyed, so this was a major
find.
With the advancement of forensic technology, Kevin sought to have the hair re-examined.
A long bureaucratic and legal battle followed.
It took three years, but Kevin was finally permitted to carry out the tests.
In 1998, the results were in. An analyst from the Victorian
Institute of Forensic Medicine concluded that the hairs were easily differentiated at the
microscopic level. There were very clear differences in colour, pigmentation and other features.
They had not originated from the same scalp as had been claimed during Colin Ross' murder
trial. The samples were retested by the Federal Police Investigation Unit who concluded,
the hairs from the brown blanket could not have come from Alma Tursky.
In 2005, Kevin Morgan released a book on his findings titled Gun Alley, Murder, Lies and Failure of Justice. That year, assisted by legal experts, he prepared a petition to the Victorian
government asking for the verdict in Almitursky's murder to be annulled. Such requests were typically made by the convicted
person themselves, but this was the first time in Australian legal history that the request was made
posthumously. Kevin had been given permission to go ahead by both Colin and Dauma's living relatives,
who all signed the petition. The Attorney-General considered the petition for a year before referring
the matter to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria. Fourteen months later,
after the court's most senior judges had pored through all the new and old evidence of the case,
a report was completed. They concluded that if the 1922 jury were given access to the recent hair test
results, Colin Ross would have been found not guilty. The trial was formally ruled a miscarriage
of justice. Referring to the case as a travesty, the Attorney General presented a framed letter
of pardon for Colin Ross that was handed
to members of his and the Tershki families. One of Colin's nieces felt a great sense of relief,
saying, "...I had lived with this fear and doubt for most of my life, the more so as I began to
have children, that perhaps I carried the genes of a murderer. That shadow has gone."
Alma's relatives felt the pardon wasn't enough. A second cousin of hers said,
"'A pardon means I am forgiving you for something you have done. Shouldn't it rather be an exoneration,
which means I accept you didn't do this in the first place."
Nevertheless, they were grateful for the impact the pardon would have on the country's collective
memory of Alma. One of Alma's nieces said,
"...the pardon has also helped restore the reputation of Alma because it shows that she
didn't enter the wine bar as was said in the trial. She was a good
girl. Collins' remains were ordered to be removed from the unmarked prison grave they were resting
in so he could be given a proper burial. Melbourne jail had long since been decommissioned and the
remains of deceased prisoners buried there were moved around and reburied at different sites.
Colin's remains were in a coffin shared by three other men and it took years to track down where
exactly they had been placed and which remains among them belonged to Colin. In October 2010,
Colin's relatives held a funeral service on his behalf on the site where he'd been executed.
The relatives of Alma Tursky attended in a show of solidarity. One of Colin's relatives stated,
This morning we leave behind us the cold stones of the Melbourne jail.
Colin is at last set free. He is with his family once again.
at last set free. He is with his family once again. Colin's remains were cremated and interred beside those of his mother in rural Victoria. Kevin Morgan, whose actions led to Colin Ross's
vindication, told the Age newspaper, "... a big stain on the legal system has finally been expunged and a shadow on two Australian
families has also been lifted. That justice has finally been done for the Ross and Tersky families
after 86 years is a tremendous outcome. Reflecting on the entire experience for his book, Kevin said,
17 years earlier as I walked through the picture gallery pondering the identity
of Charles Blackman's schoolgirl, I could not have guessed what ordinary people could do,
let alone achieve, in the face of a perceived injustice.
With Colin Ross pardoned, the question remained, who killed Alma Tursky?
Based on the known facts of the case, Kevin Morgan was surprised Colin Ross was ever considered
a suspect.
He had no history of sexual-based offending and in Kevin's words he was,
"...an impulsive bungling criminal acting without forethought as exemplified by him proposing a
gunpoint and the planned robbery that went awry. He could be stupid to put it frankly.
In contrast, Kevin concluded Alma's killer was...
Someone possessed of a clear mind, capable of thinking ahead and aware of the sorts of
clues that might disclose his identity.
This person was not stupid or careless, may indeed have been educated and appears to have
known about techniques of crime detection as they were then applied and the state of
forensic medicine in 1922. Other known child killers were tenuously linked to Elmer, but none were considered genuine
suspects. While researching his book, Kevin Morgan collated all the information provided by Elmer's
younger sister Viola, who was 10 years old in 1921. In doing so, Kevin discovered a chilling secret. After Alma's murder, Viola was plagued
by nightmares of being pursued by a male figure through dark places. Sometimes she'd have
visions of the man poking his head through her bedroom window. During one nightmare,
he entered Viola's room and told her, I came home at one o'clock.
Viola believed the man in her nightmares was George Murphy, the husband of one of her older
cousins. She sensed George was a pedophile and that he'd wanted to sexually assault her from a
young age. It all started when she was around six or seven years old and he rubbed her
legs in an inappropriate manner. From then onwards, Viola felt George was trying to groom her.
She took to hiding in a wardrobe whenever he visited and asked other family members to keep
close to her whenever he was around. On one occasion, he chased her out onto the street
and continued to pursue her until she reached safety. When Viola was 16, George asked her to
marry him. She refused. Viola didn't tell anyone about George's actions at the time as she felt
no one would believe her. Her silence was fuelled by the era's
conservative culture, as the topic of sex, even non-consensual sex, was never openly discussed.
In an interview in 1997, Viola revealed that she wasn't questioned by anybody,
including the police, about her sister's murder. Therefore, she never implicated George Murphy in
the crime, saying, "...I was kept right out of it. Right out of it altogether."
Kevin Morgan discovered that in December 1921, George Murphy was working as a draftsman for the Office of the
Register General and Register of Titles. His office was on Queen Street in Melbourne's CBD,
which intersected all the main thoroughfares relevant to the Tershki case, including Burke,
Little Collins and Collins Streets. Kevin theorised that after unsuccessfully grooming Viola, George Murphy
set his sights on Alma. Of the two sisters, Alma was the more trusting and obedient,
a befitting target for a child predator. If Alma had endured any form of sexual abuse,
it was reasonable to assume she wouldn't have spoken out about it.
The fact that it involved a family member would have made it even more unmentionable.
Maybe her uncle-in-law had scared her silent.
A month before her murder, Alma told her friends that a spiritualist had warned that she'd die soon.
Although this story was proven false,
Kevin Morgan wondered whether Elmer was exposing a very real fear she had within a fictitious
narrative. George Murphy could have threatened to kill Elmer if she exposed his crimes.
When George learnt Elmer was leaving Melbourne to live with her father in regional Victoria, he might have feared losing
control of her. Outside of his reach, she could be compelled to expose him. As Kevin theorised,
George might have felt like he had to silence her once and for all.
By the time Kevin Morgan began looking into George Murphy as a suspect in the Tershki case,
the records of his former employer were no longer available. Therefore,
George's whereabouts that day couldn't be proven. When Alma had arrived at the butcher shop on the
day of her disappearance, she wasn't in a state of distress. Therefore, Kevin Morgan believed that her ordeal began shortly after she left the
shop. Witnesses had reported seeing a man following Alma along Little Collins Street before
confronting her outside the Eastern Arcade. Alma wasn't inclined to speak to strangers, so it was
possible that she knew the man. Alma had been instructed to leave the parcel of meat
at her aunt's flat, knowing that the flat itself would be empty. In a move that was completely out
of character for a girl who wrote a school essay titled, Duty First, Alma instead slowly and
nervously wandered around to the neighbouring streets, avoiding her intended
destination. According to Kevin Morgan, quote, the meeting altered Alma's course. She diverged
from her route to her aunt's flat ten minutes away because it was no longer a sanctuary.
Kevin considered whether Alma had told the man where she was headed and then stalled
for time out of fear that he would go there and wait for her.
Perhaps she was seeking safety by remaining in a public, populated area.
She wandered into the eastern arcade only to realise it wasn't a suitable space for
lone children so she headed back outside. Shortly after this, the screams of
a distressed young girl were heard echoing up Little Collins Street.
When speaking to the press in January 1922, investigators leading the Tursky case assured
the public. No piece of information was disregarded and every
supposed clue was subjected to the closest scrutiny. At that time, the case's lead detective,
Fred Pigott, was considered a real-life Sherlock Holmes. A hard-nosed detective with an eye for
detail, Pigott was a celebrity due to his work on
many high-profile homicide cases.
He was widely regarded as one of the best detectives of his era.
His work on the Tershki case not only earned him accolades and respect, but credited him
as helping bring forensic science into Australian courtrooms.
Detective Pigott had passed away by the time Colin Ross was pardoned.
During his illustrious career, he was involved in a case involving a husband accused of fatally
shooting his wife.
In a groundbreaking move, Pigott carried out what was then the first example of blood spatter
interpretation in a Victorian criminal case.
He determined that the killing was in fact a suicide, and his work saved the accused from being executed.
What exactly went wrong for Pigott in the Tersky case will never be fully understood.
never be fully understood. He was the type of detective to put in the work to ensure justice was correctly served, but had failed spectacularly in that instance. It's believed that Pigott put
too much faith in the analysis of the hair evidence, even though it wasn't reliable.
Still, this didn't answer why so many significant pieces of evidence that exonerated Colin Ross
went willfully ignored. In 1961, Detective Pigott gave an interview that touched on the Tershki
case, during which he stated, "...the public were clamouring for police action and the politicians,
of course, were harassing us. We survived the uproar long enough
to plump for the theory that Ross ravished and strangled Alma in the saloon. But we were well
aware that our evidence was only circumstantial. He also said,
While I suspected Ross, we desired to build up the chain of evidence that was being forged
against him. In his book on the case, Kevin Morgan added his own thoughts to this assertion,
writing, "...thus, when a piece of evidence could not be forged into a link,
it seems it was simply discarded."
it was simply discarded. Throughout his time as Colin's attorney, Thomas Brennan had received many letters. Some warned him against helping Colin, while others expressed their support of
the condemned man. There were even multiple alleged confessions from someone claiming to be Alma Turski's real killer. Brennan easily
recognised the confessions as hoaxes. Some had been penned by Collins' supporters in the
hopes they could somehow prevent his execution. But on Sunday, April 23, 1922, the eve before
Colin Ross was set to be executed, an anonymous letter arrived at Brennan's office
that he felt was genuine. The author left behind no identifying information save for a postmark
indicating the letter had been sent from a country town in Victoria. As reproduced in Brennan's book on the case titled The Gun Alley Tragedy, the latter read...
To Colin Ross at Melbourne Jail
You have been condemned for a crime which you never committed, and are to suffer for another's
fault. Since your conviction you have, no doubt, wondered what manner of man the real murderer is,
and who could not only encompass
the girl's death but allow you to suffer in his stead. My dear Ross, if it is any satisfaction
for you to know it, believe me that you will die but once, but he will continue to die for the rest
of his life." Honoured and fawned upon by those who know him, the smile upon his
lips but hides the canker eating into his soul. Day and night his life is a hell without the
hope of reprieve. Gladly would he take your place on Monday next if he had himself alone to consider.
if he had himself alone to consider. His reason, then briefly stated, is this. A devoted and loving mother is ill. A shock would be fatal. Himself he will sacrifice when his mother passes away.
He will do it by his own hand. He will board the ferry across the sticks with a lie on his lips, with the only hope
that religion is a myth and death annihilation. It is too painful for him to go into the details
of the crime. It is simply a Jekyll and Hyde existence. By a freak of nature, he was not made as other men.
This girl was not the first.
With a procurus, all things are possible.
In this case, there was no intention of murder.
The victim unexpectedly collapsed.
May it be some satisfaction to yourself, your devoted mother, and the members of your family
to know that at least one of the legions of the damned, who is the cause of your death,
is suffering the pangs of hell.
He may not ask your forgiveness or sympathy, but he asks for your understanding. you